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Featured researches published by Jingkun Li.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2016

Structural and mechanistic basis for the high activity of Fe–N–C catalysts toward oxygen reduction

Jingkun Li; Shraboni Ghoshal; Wentao Liang; Moulay-Tahar Sougrati; Frédéric Jaouen; Barr Halevi; Samuel McKinney; Geoff McCool; Chunrong Ma; Xianxia Yuan; Zi-Feng Ma; Sanjeev Mukerjee; Qingying Jia

The development of efficient non-platinum group metal (non-PGM) catalysts for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) is of paramount importance for clean and sustainable energy storage and conversion devices. The major bottleneck in developing Fe–N–C materials as the leading non-PGM catalysts lies in the poor understanding of the nature of active sites and reaction mechanisms. Herein, we report a scalable metal organic framework-derived Fe–N–C catalyst with high ORR activity demonstrated in practical H2/air fuel cells, and an unprecedented turnover frequency (TOF) in acid in rotating disk electrode. By characterizing the catalyst under both ex situ and operando conditions using combined microscopic and spectroscopic techniques, we show that the structures of active sites under ex situ and working conditions are drastically different. Resultantly, the active site proposed here, a non-planar ferrous Fe–N4 moiety embedded in distorted carbon matrix characterized by a high Fe2+/3+ redox potential, is in contrast with those proposed hitherto derived from ex situ characterizations. This site reversibly switches to an in-plane ferric Fe–N4 moiety poisoned by oxygen adsorbates during the redox transition, with the population of active sites controlled by the Fe2+/3+ redox potential. The unprecedented TOF of the active site is correlated to its near-optimal Fe2+/3+ redox potential, and essentially originated from its favorable biomimetic dynamic nature that balances the site-blocking effect and O2 dissociation. The porous and disordered carbon matrix of the catalyst plays pivotal roles for its measured high ORR activity by hosting high population of reactant-accessible active sites.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Asymmetric Volcano Trend in Oxygen Reduction Activity of Pt and Non-Pt Catalysts: In Situ Identification of the Site-Blocking Effect

Jingkun Li; Amell Musaid Alsudairi; Zi-Feng Ma; Sanjeev Mukerjee; Qingying Jia

Proper understanding of the major limitations of current catalysts for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) is essential for further advancement. Herein by studying representative Pt and non-Pt ORR catalysts with a wide range of redox potential (Eredox) via combined electrochemical, theoretical, and in situ spectroscopic methods, we demonstrate that the role of the site-blocking effect in limiting the ORR varies drastically depending on the Eredox of active sites; and the intrinsic activity of active sites with low Eredox have been markedly underestimated owing to the overlook of this effect. Accordingly, we establish a general asymmetric volcano trend in the ORR activity: the ORR of the catalysts on the overly high Eredox side of the volcano is limited by the intrinsic activity; whereas the ORR of the catalysts on the low Eredox side is limited by either the site-blocking effect and/or intrinsic activity depending on the Eredox.


Nature Communications | 2017

Identification of catalytic sites in cobalt-nitrogen-carbon materials for the oxygen reduction reaction

Andrea Zitolo; Nastaran Ranjbar-Sahraie; Tzonka Mineva; Jingkun Li; Qingying Jia; Serban Stamatin; George F. Harrington; Stephen Mathew Lyth; Petr Krtil; Sanjeev Mukerjee; Emiliano Fonda; Frédéric Jaouen

Single-atom catalysts with full utilization of metal centers can bridge the gap between molecular and solid-state catalysis. Metal-nitrogen-carbon materials prepared via pyrolysis are promising single-atom catalysts but often also comprise metallic particles. Here, we pyrolytically synthesize a Co–N–C material only comprising atomically dispersed cobalt ions and identify with X-ray absorption spectroscopy, magnetic susceptibility measurements and density functional theory the structure and electronic state of three porphyrinic moieties, CoN4C12, CoN3C10,porp and CoN2C5. The O2 electro-reduction and operando X-ray absorption response are measured in acidic medium on Co–N–C and compared to those of a Fe–N–C catalyst prepared similarly. We show that cobalt moieties are unmodified from 0.0 to 1.0 V versus a reversible hydrogen electrode, while Fe-based moieties experience structural and electronic-state changes. On the basis of density functional theory analysis and established relationships between redox potential and O2-adsorption strength, we conclude that cobalt-based moieties bind O2 too weakly for efficient O2 reduction.Nitrogen-doped carbon materials with atomically dispersed iron or cobalt are promising for catalytic use. Here, the authors show that cobalt moieties have a higher redox potential, bind oxygen more weakly and are less active toward oxygen reduction than their iron counterpart, despite similar coordination.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Metal and Metal Oxide Interactions and Their Catalytic Consequences for Oxygen Reduction Reaction

Qingying Jia; Shraboni Ghoshal; Jingkun Li; Wentao Liang; Guangnan Meng; Haiying Che; Shiming Zhang; Zi-Feng Ma; Sanjeev Mukerjee

Many industrial catalysts are composed of metal particles supported on metal oxides (MMO). It is known that the catalytic activity of MMO materials is governed by metal and metal oxide interactions (MMOI), but how to optimize MMO systems via manipulation of MMOI remains unclear, due primarily to the ambiguous nature of MMOI. Herein, we develop a Pt/NbOx/C system with tunable structural and electronic properties via a modified arc plasma deposition method. We unravel the nature of MMOI by characterizing this system under reactive conditions utilizing combined electrochemical, microscopy, and in situ spectroscopy. We show that Pt interacts with the Nb in unsaturated NbOx owing to the oxygen deficiency in the MMO interface, whereas Pt interacts with the O in nearly saturated NbOx, and further interacts with Nb when the oxygen atoms penetrate into the Pt cluster at elevated potentials. While the Pt-Nb interactions do not benefit the inherent activity of Pt toward oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), the Pt-O interactions improve the ORR activity by shortening the Pt-Pt bond distance. Pt donates electrons to NbOx in both Pt-Nb and Pt-O cases. The resultant electron eficiency stabilizes low-coordinated Pt sites, hereby stabilizing small Pt particles. This determines the two characteristic features of MMO systems: dispersion of small metal particles and high catalytic durability. These findings contribute to our understandings of MMO catalytic systems.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Experimental proof of the bifunctional mechanism for the hydrogen oxidation in alkaline media

Jingkun Li; Shraboni Ghoshal; Michael Bates; Todd Miller; Veronica Davies; Eli Stavitski; Klaus Attenkofer; Sanjeev Mukerjee; Zi-Feng Ma; Qingying Jia

Realization of the hydrogen economy relies on effective hydrogen production, storage, and utilization. The slow kinetics of hydrogen evolution and oxidation reaction (HER/HOR) in alkaline media limits many practical applications involving hydrogen generation and utilization, and how to overcome this fundamental limitation remains debatable. Here we present a kinetic study of the HOR on representative catalytic systems in alkaline media. Electrochemical measurements show that the HOR rate of Pt-Ru/C and Ru/C systems is decoupled to their hydrogen binding energy (HBE), challenging the current prevailing HBE mechanism. The alternative bifunctional mechanism is verified by combined electrochemical and in situ spectroscopic data, which provide convincing evidence for the presence of hydroxy groups on surface Ru sites in the HOR potential region and its key role in promoting the rate-determining Volmer step. The conclusion presents important references for design and selection of HOR catalysts.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017

Resolving the Iron Phthalocyanine Redox Transitions for ORR Catalysis in Aqueous Media

Amell Musaid Alsudairi; Jingkun Li; Nagappan Ramaswamy; Sanjeev Mukerjee; K. M. Abraham; Qingying Jia

Metal macrocycles are among the most important catalytic systems in electrocatalysis and biocatalysis owing to their rich redox chemistry. Precise understanding of the redox behavior of metal macrocycles in operando is essential for fundamental studies and practical applications of this catalytic system. Here we present electrochemical data for the representative iron phthalocyanine (FePc) in both aqueous and nonaqueous media coupled with in situ Raman and X-ray absorption analyses to challenge the traditional notion of the redox transition of FePc at the low potential end in aqueous media by showing that it arises from the redox transition of the ring. Our data unequivocally demonstrate that the electron is shuttled to the Pc ring via the Fe(II)/Fe(I) redox center. The Fe(II)/Fe(I) redox transition of FePc in aqueous media is indiscernible by normal spectroscopic methods owing to the lack of a suitable axial ligand to stabilize the Fe(I) state.


Langmuir | 2017

Highly Active and Stable Fe–N–C Catalyst for Oxygen Depolarized Cathode Applications

Jingkun Li; Qingying Jia; Shraboni Ghoshal; Wentao Liang; Sanjeev Mukerjee

Anion immunity toward the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) has tremendous implications in electrocatalysis with applications for fuel cells, metal-air batteries, and oxygen depolarized cathodes (ODCs) in the anodic evolution of chlorine. The necessity of exploring ORR catalysts with immunity to anion adsorption is particularly significant considering that platinum group metal (PGM) catalysts are costly and highly vulnerable to impurities such as halides. Herein, we report a metal organic framework (MOF)-derived Fe-N-C catalyst that exhibits a dramatically improved half-wave potential of 240 mV compared to the state-of-the-art RhxSy/C catalyst in a rotating disk electrode in the presence of Cl-. The Fe-N4 active sites in Fe-N-C are intrinsically immune to Cl- poisoning, in contrast to Pt/C, which is severely susceptible to Cl- poisoning. As a result, the activity of Fe-N-C decreases only marginally in the presence of Cl-, far exceeding that of Pt/C. The viability of this catalyst as ODCs is further demonstrated in real-life hydrochloric acid electrolyzers using highly concentrated HCl solution saturated with Cl2 gas as the electrolyte. The introduction of Fe-N-C materials as ODC catalysts here overcomes the limitations of (i) the low intrinsic ORR activity of RhxSy/C as the state-of-the-art ODC catalyst; (ii) the vulnerability to Cl- poisoning of Pt/C as the state-of-the-art ORR catalyst; and (iii) the high cost of precious metals in these two materials, resulting in a cost-effective ODC catalyst with the overall performance exceeding that of all previously reported materials.


Nano Letters | 2018

Roles of Mo Surface Dopants in Enhancing the ORR Performance of Octahedral PtNi Nanoparticles

Qingying Jia; Zipeng Zhao; Liang Cao; Jingkun Li; Shraboni Ghoshal; Veronica Davies; Eli Stavitski; Klaus Attenkofer; Zeyan Liu; Mufan Li; Xiangfeng Duan; Sanjeev Mukerjee; Tim Mueller; Yu Huang

Doping with a transition metal was recently shown to greatly boost the activity and durability of PtNi/C octahedral nanoparticles (NPs) for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), but its specific roles remain unclear. By combining electrochemistry, ex situ and in situ spectroscopic techniques, density functional theory calculations, and a newly developed kinetic Monte Carlo model, we showed that Mo atoms are preferentially located on the vertex and edge sites of Mo-PtNi/C in the form of oxides, which are stable within the wide potential window of the electrochemical cycle. These surface Mo oxides stabilize adjacent Pt sites, hereby stabilizing the octahedral shape enriched with (111) facets, and lead to increased concentration of Ni in subsurface layers where they are protected against acid dissolution. Consequently, the favorable Pt3Ni(111) structure for the ORR is stabilized on the surface of PtNi/C NPs in acid against voltage cycling. Significantly, the unusual potential-dependent oxygen coverage trend on Mo-doped PtNi/C NPs as revealed by the surface-sensitive Δμ analysis suggests that the Mo dopants may also improve the ORR kinetics by modifying the coordination environments of Pt atoms on the surface. Our studies point out a possible way to stabilize the favorable shape and composition established on conceptual catalytic models in practical nanoscale catalysts.


Nano Energy | 2016

Spectroscopic insights into the nature of active sites in iron–nitrogen–carbon electrocatalysts for oxygen reduction in acid

Qingying Jia; Nagappan Ramaswamy; Urszula Tylus; Kara Strickland; Jingkun Li; Alexey Serov; Kateryna Artyushkova; Plamen Atanassov; Jacob Anibal; Cenk Gumeci; Scott Calabrese Barton; Moulay Tahar Sougrati; Frédéric Jaouen; Barr Halevi; Sanjeev Mukerjee


ACS Catalysis | 2016

Circumventing Metal Dissolution Induced Degradation of Pt-Alloy Catalysts in Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells: Revealing the Asymmetric Volcano Nature of Redox Catalysis

Qingying Jia; Jingkun Li; Keegan M. Caldwell; David E. Ramaker; Joseph M. Ziegelbauer; Ratandeep S. Kukreja; Anusorn Kongkanand; Sanjeev Mukerjee

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Qingying Jia

Northeastern University

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Zi-Feng Ma

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Barr Halevi

University of New Mexico

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Wentao Liang

Northeastern University

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